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Unvanquished (video game)

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Unvanquished
Developer(s)Game community
Initial releaseFebruary 29, 2012; 12 years ago (2012-02-29)
Preview release
0.54 beta[1] / January 29, 2023; 21 months ago (2023-01-29)
Repositorygithub.com/Unvanquished/Unvanquished
Enginedaemon (game engine)
Operating systemLinux, MacOS, Microsoft Windows
TypeMultiplayer video game, first-person shooter, real-time strategy game
LicenseGNU GPLv3, CC BY-SA 2.5[2]
Websiteunvanquished.net

Unvanquished is a free and open-source video game. It is a multiplayer first-person shooter and real-time strategy game where Humans and Aliens fight for domination.

Gameplay

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A large alien Tyrant is being attacked by a human (background) and a machine-gun turret (offscreen, left) as it tries to demolish the human base.
A human player building a defensive structure

Players fight in an alien or human team with respective melee and conventional ballistic weaponry. The aim of the game is to destroy the enemy team and the structures that keep them alive, as well as ensure one's own team's bases and expansions are maintained. Players earn resources for themselves and their team via aggression.[3]

Commenting on gameplay, Lifewire noted: "One particularly fun aspect of Unvanquished is that as insects, players can crawl on the walls and ceilings, adding a new, though perhaps somewhat disorienting, take on game physics".[4]

Development

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Unvanquished is a spiritual successor to Tremulous. The gameplay and game resources are under the CC BY-SA 2.5 Creative Commons license whilst the Daemon engine is under the GPLv3.[2]

Development began the summer of 2011 on SourceForge, with the first alpha version being released on February 29, 2012.[3] The game moved to Github in 2015.[5]

Unvanquished is developed by a team of volunteers who used to release a new Alpha on the first Sunday of every month.[3] However, since the project reached a new stage of development, betas are released with less frequency.[citation needed]

Engine

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The lineage of the Daemon engine

Unvanquished uses the Dæmon Engine, born from a merge of the Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory engine (id Tech 3) and the XreaL engine (merge that was initially forked from the OpenWolf engine).[6][7][8]

The daemon engine is a fork of the earlier version of the OpenWolf Engine.[9] While developing "their" engine, Unvanquished team uploaded clean copy of the source code, dropped original commit history[10] and claimed project as theirs.[11][12] Its development is now proceeding in its own path from its predecessors.[6]

In 2015, with version 0.42, the Unvanquished developers managed to separate the game's engine code from the game's code by teaming up with developers of Xonotic.[5]

Reception

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Michael Larabel from Phoronix.com praised Unvanquished's graphics in July 2012, while it was still in alpha state.[6] Lifewire praised the insect mechanic as an interesting twist and the ease of modding (referring to the level editor).[4]

Softpedia reviewed the game in version 0.49 in March 2016 and gave 3.5 stars.[13]

Between 2011 and June 2017 the game was downloaded alone from SourceForge over 1.3 million times.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Unvanquished 0.54, ARMed and dangerous". Unvanquished. 2023-01-29. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  2. ^ a b "Copying". GitHub. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b c "About - Unvanquished". unvanquished.net. Retrieved 2014-01-18.
  4. ^ a b Dave Rankin. "5 Open Source First-Person Shooter Video Games". Retrieved 2020-02-03.
  5. ^ a b Marius Nestor (3 August 2015). "Unvanquished FPS Game Gets Tremulous' Vega Map, Plans on Leaving SourceForge". softpedia.
  6. ^ a b c Michael Larrabel (2012-07-01). "Unvanquished: A Very Promising Open-Source Game". Phoronix. Retrieved 2015-07-07.
  7. ^ Larabel, Michael (2013-09-15). "Unvanquished Is Rewriting, Modernizing The Quake 3 Engine". Phoronix. Retrieved 2024-08-09.
  8. ^ Larabel, Michael (2015-08-03). "Unvanquished Makes Its Open-Source Engine Easy For Other Games". Phoronix. Retrieved 2024-08-09.
  9. ^ "OpenWolf game engine". GitHub.
  10. ^ "Upload the codebase". GitHub.
  11. ^ "Renamed engine". GitHub.
  12. ^ "Rebrand to Daemon". GitHub.
  13. ^ Alexandru Dulcianu (2016-03-14). "Unvanquished Review". softpedia.
  14. ^ "Statistics". SourceForge. 2017-06-06. Retrieved 2017-06-06.
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